Draft:3 Leaf Audio
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Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Musical instruments |
Founded | 2008 |
Headquarters | Seattle, Washington |
Key people | Spencer Doren |
Products | Effects units |
Website | 3leafaudio.com |
3 Leaf Audio is an American manufacturer of boutique effect units for electric bass & guitar.The company, founded by Spencer Doren and operating from Seattle, Washington,[1] started with the Groove Regulator pedal, an envelope controlled filter effect inspired by the Lovetone Meatball.[2] All of the materials fabricated for the pedal units are sourced from American manufacturers. Each batch of pedals released is a limited edition run, utilizing unique colors, graphics and enclosure finishes. 3 Leaf Audio is primarily a one-man operation.[3]
History
[edit]3 Leaf Audio began as a hobby project for Doren during his high school years. The project originally started from a desire to get bass tones he could not achieve from already existing gear. As interest in his products grew he began to outsource printed-circuit-board (PCB) fabrication and enclosure machining, while still maintaining his role as the final assembler.[4]
Preamp harness
[edit]Effect pedals
[edit]Pedal | Year | Notes | Total Units Released |
---|---|---|---|
Groove Regulator | 2008 | Modeled after Lovetone Meatball | 465[5] |
Groove Regulator 2 (GR2) | 2010 | Replaced feedback knob with wet/dry knob (feedback control became internal trimpot) | 315[5] |
Proton | 2011 | 455[5] | |
Wonderlove | 2012 | 710[5] | |
Proton V2 | 2012 | 1025[5] | |
Wonderlove V2 | 2015 | 600[5] | |
Proton V3 | 2015 | 1000[5] | |
Chromatron | 2018 | 300[5] | |
Proton V4 | 2020 | 900[5] |
Pedal | Year | Notes | Total Units Released |
---|---|---|---|
Octabvre | 2014 | Analog octave down, tone goes from "OC-2" to "Mutron" with sub-solo footswitch | 500[5] |
Octabvre Mini | 2016 | Smaller footprint, with "Tim-tuning" mod and no sub-solo footswitch | 710[5] |
Octabvre MKII | 2017 | Same layout as Octabvre but with an added "Tim-tuning" toggle | 800[5] |
Octabvre MKIII | 2020 | Controls and footswitches of Octabvre MKII on a smaller enclosure, changed to a vol/vol circuit | 900[5] |
Pedal | Year | Notes | Total Units Released |
---|---|---|---|
(You're) DOOM | 2013 | 600[5] | |
DOOM 2 | 2019 | 600[5] | |
DOOM 2 (Re-voiced) | 2023 | 977[5] |
Add some note regarding HGM DOOM 2
Pedal | Year | Notes | Total Units Released |
---|---|---|---|
PWNZOR | 2012 | Optical compressor | 120[5] |
The Enabler | 2013 | Bass preamp with EQ and DI | 300[5] |
Little Black Box | 2014 | Clean boost | 99[5] |
Notable musicians using 3 Leaf pedals
[edit]- Tim Lefebvre, touring and session musician: noted for being the inspiration of the "Octabvre" pedal line, as well as working with Doren to create the "Tim-tuning" switch available on later itterations.[6]
- Henrik Linder, bassist for Dirty Loops: utilizes the Octabvre MKII and the Proton V3.[7]
- Rob Derhak, bassist for moe. and Blue Star Radiation: Newer layout of his pedalboards sport the Chromatron, Octabvre MKII, DOOM and Proton V3.[8]
- Ryan Stasik, bassist for Umphrey's Mcgee: As of April 2015, Ryan was using the DOOM, Wonderlove, Little Black Box and Octabvre pedals.[9]
- Ian Martin Allison of Scott's Bass Lessons: Touring and session bassist known for favoring DOOM 2 and Octabvre pedals for synth bass tones.[10][11]
References
[edit]- ^ "3Leaf Audio Groove Regulator". Reverb. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ "3 Leaf Audio GR2 Envelope Filter Review". Guitar Interactive Magazine. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ "About". 3Leaf Audio. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ "Spencer Doren of 3 Leaf Audio & Pike Amplification". YouTube. New York Bass Works TV. 2023-12-03. Retrieved 2024-11-04.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Releases". 3Leaf Audio. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ "Tim Lefebvre". Equipboard. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ Scotts' Bass Lessons (2024-01-01). The most INSANE Pedalboard? w/ HENRIK LINDER (Dirty Loops). YouTube. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ "Rob Derhak moe. pedalboard (Feb 2024)". Wikimedia Commons. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
- ^ 3 LEAF AUDIO (2024-01-01). Ryan Stasik (Umphrey's McGee) Pedalboard Walkthrough - April 2015. YouTube. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
{{cite AV media}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Ian Martin Allison". Ian Martin Allison Official Site. Retrieved 2024-10-30.
- ^ Scott's Bass Lessons (2024-01-01). The 10 Greatest Synth Bass Lines Through History (and how to get the sounds). YouTube. Retrieved 2024-11-03.
External links
[edit]